ALEISTER CROWLEY, who with Ian Fleming and Roald Dahl, reportedly worked for the UK security services. Richard B. Spence writes in his 2008 book Secret Agent 666: Aleister Crowley, British Intelligence and the Occult that Crowley was most likely a lifelong agent for British Intelligence.

Dahl made visits to the Roosevelt family home in Hyde Park, New York state.

Aha, yes, exactly. It does seem like they are creating a 'persona' for this young man, nice and early, to eventually propel him to stardom, a little song and dance machine with a few prepackaged preprogrammed sets of beliefs and behaviors, one for public consumption and other's for 'private' consumption.

And to add to Peter's comment below when he says that Aang made a 'proverbial "slam dunk"! The convent school girls got their hands on the keys to the kingdom, with regards to who the real powers that be are.' Indeed, it looks like part of that power force pedo-team of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell are STILL at it. Unbelievable find of her standing in the background of the pic entitled 'Nice to meet @francescacapaldi at a shoot today😀'

The proverbial "slam dunk"! The convent school girls got their hands on the keys to the kingdom, with regards to who the real powers that be are. (Stellar examples of who sits atop the apex of the power secret society power "pyramid".) Edge of your seat reporting dears. Much obliged.

Dahl's book "Matilda" reminds me of Stranger Things, a telekinetic girl from an abusive environment uses her abilities to help friends/teacher with a crucial problem.At some point Matilda's teacher forces a fat boy to eat till he is ill, like in the movie Seven.

The movie is written "Se7en" (implying a connection between the number 7 and the letter V - something which is also found in the work of Thomas Pynchon - his first two novels are entitled "V." and "The Crying of Lot 49" - 49 = 7x7) - and the character in "Stranger Things" you are referring to is called Eleven.Note the number symbolism!It should also be noted that the authors referred to above - Ian Fleming, Roald Dahl - were very much in thrall to what the critic Tony Tanner has identified as Pynchon's main themes - "entropy and the dread of love", i.e. a refusal to see other human beings as real in their own right, and a powerful desire to succumb to the inhuman.

From an early age, Elvis seems to have realised that it was going to be up to him to do something about the family's financial problems.

'Don't worry, Mama,' he told Gladys when he overheard his parents worrying about money one day. 'When I grow up, I'm going to buy you a fine house and pay everything you owe at the grocery store, and buy two Cadillacs, one for you and Daddy and one for me.'

Wherever they lived, the three of them always slept in the same room.

But whenever Vernon was away, seeking work in other towns, Gladys and little Elvis spent the night in the same bed, talking in their own private baby language.

She encouraged him to believe that he was destined for great things. When one twin dies, she said, the survivor grows up with all the additional qualities of the other.